Fanny Buss


Frances Edith Cresswell, commonly known as Fanny Buss, was a textile and fashion designer from New Zealand active from the 1950s to the 1980s. Cresswell was also a printmaker, writer and book illustrator. Examples of her fashion designs are held in the collections of museums around New Zealand including in the Auckland War Memorial Museum, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Otago Museum, MTG Hawke's Bay and also feature in the New Zealand Fashion Museum. Cresswell was a working member of the Canterbury Society of the Arts.

Early life and family

Buss was born in Christchurch on 23 March 1910, the daughter of George Howard Buss and Frances Ethel Buss who were farming at Scargill in North Canterbury. As a child she boarded in Christchurch and Timaru before studying at the Canterbury College School of Art. In 1929 she lived in a "cheap bedsit" with Rita Angus and Jessie Lloyd.
In 1932, Buss married David Robert Douglas Cresswell, and the couple went on to have four children.

Career

Cresswell started printing fabric in the 1950s. She began with potato blocks then moved on to wood blocks and later screen printing. She started by selling table mats, curtains and beach shirts, which provided an income for her family. Cresswell labeled her garments with her maiden name, Fanny Buss. In the 1970s her dresses and coats were worn by New Zealand's first Māori woman cabinet minister Whetu Tirikatene-Sullivan.

Death

Cresswell died on 5 June 1986. She had been predeceased by her husband, Douglas, in 1960.